Dr. Gay (Caryll) Malewicki Sweely (Class of 1964)
“My years at Taft were a joy and the
foundation for my entire life,” writes Dr. Gay Sweely.
While at Taft, she was president of the
Debate Club and the Future Nurses Club, a member of National Honor Society,
Honor Club, GAA, Future Teachers Association, Bowling Team, and played bassoon
in the band. She was named Miss Chicago
Park District, Miss Junior Citizen Chicago in 1963, won 23 science fair awards
including honorable mention at the national level, and was a keynote speaker for
the 1963 NAACP Convention in Chicago on the importance of youth.
Graduating cum laude from
Illinois Wesleyan University with majors in art history, literature and
writing, and comparative religions, she earned her master’s degree summa cum
laude in art history at University of Utah in pre-Columbian art. Early jobs ranged from director of public
relations for the Air Force Sergeants’ Association and technical editing for
the Bureau of the Census and IBM Corporation, to teaching art history,
technical editing, English and related topics at Northern Virginia Community
College. Relocating to New Zealand in the mid-1980s, Dr. Sweely
earned additional arts and art history degrees specializing in Asian and
Oceanic art from University of Canterbury in New Zealand and University of Melbourne in Australia, where she completed her doctorate.
Since 2000, Dr. Sweely
has been a lecturer in art history and history at
Eastern Kentucky University’s Department of Art and Design, and was
named the university’s top teacher in 2003. She has edited over 100
publications in three countries and coauthored the book, “Becoming Australians”
in 2001.
Dr. Sweely and her
husband, Stephen, have two sons.